Former Fort Lauderdale Vice Mayor Cindi Hutchinson plans to accept responsibility for some of the criminal charges against her — which included letting a city developer pay to install a new toilet at her home — prosecutors and her attorney confirmed Tuesday.

The Broward State Attorney's Office will recommend that Hutchinson serve four months in the Broward County Jail and she will likely become an inmate by the end of this month, her lawyer Bruce Udolf said.

"She is just anxious to put this behind her and move on with her life," Udolf said.

Hutchinson is scheduled for a change-of-plea hearing on March 18, two days after her 56th birthday, court records show.

Prosecutors and Udolf declined to say what charges are included in the planned plea agreement or whether Hutchinson is expected to plead "guilty" or "no contest."

Hutchinson was arrested more than two years ago on 11 charges that she traded her City Commission votes for $14,000 worth of "thank you" gifts from developers, who received zoning changes from the city while she was in elected office. She was immediately released on $10,500 bond.

She was charged Jan. 28, 2011, with three counts of unlawful compensation, four counts of official misconduct, and one count each of grand theft, petty theft, conspiracy to commit unlawful compensation, and perjury. Prosecutors said she failed to report gifts as required by law and gave false statements to a Broward Sheriff's detective when questioned.

Prosecutors accused her of accepting valuable home improvements they said were a reward from developers for her votes in support of controversial developer Glenn Wright's luxurious La Preserve and Georgian Oaks residential projects.

Hutchinson was accused of letting developers pay to install a new toilet, surround sound system and special lighting for her pool, fences, pavers, and air conditioning repair work from subcontractors who worked for Wright and his former business partner, Steven Goldstrom.

Prosecutors said the work was done at Goldstrom's direction after Hutchinson voted to rezone land for projects in her city district in 2003 and 2004. The work was done on Hutchinson's family home in the Edgewood neighborhood.

Hutchinson was not charged in relation to other allegations made by Goldstrom. Court records show Goldstrom said he gave Hutchinson several thousands in cash, a new stove, refrigerator, washer and dryer while she was in office and arranged for a $30,000 air-conditioning overhaul — at her suggestion — at the Fort Lauderdale Woman's Club where she was a member.

Hutchinson, who could not be reached for comment Tuesday, served three terms on the Lauderdale commission between 2000 and March 2009, when term limits forced her out. She flip-flopped between parties, starting out as a Democrat, switching to Republican in 1999, then back to Democrat in 2007.